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20120404

A shock-report by Stellenbosch University’s Health sciences faculty dean Prof Jimmy Volmink and his ‘transformation executive assistant Diana Yach describes Afrikaans as an ‘obstacle to transformation”- and demands that the faculty must start teaching only in English; that “Afrikaans fails to attract students with progressive mind sets’. The deeply offensive report was immediately attacked by Advocate Jacques du Preez, writing for the FW de Klerk foundation.

Adv. Du Preez slammed the Yach/Volmink reportas ‘offensive and insensitive’ , writing on behalf of the FW de Klerk foundation that 'transformationists' are clearly gunning to ethnically-cleanse Afrikaans from the Tygerberg Health faculty hospital of the University of Stellenbosch. Tygerberg hospital serves the large community in the northern-suburbs of Cape Town – which is overwhelmingly Afrikaans-speaking (whites and people of colour). Du Preez warns on 3 April 2012 that the Volmink/Yach report – which wants to ethnically-cleanse Afrikaans from the entire campus and from the hospital, is based on unscientific research, and that it is moreover deeply offensive to all the Afrikaans-speakers.

Advocate Du Preez attacks the factulry’s transformation executive Mrs Yach who prepared it, “as apparently not interested in creating a welcoming and inclusive environment" for the Western province's mainly coloured and white Afrikaans speaking majority. “This health faculty) report creates the offensive impression that students who want to study in Afrikaans are "narrow-minded" and "long for the previous realities of South Africa (i.e.: ‘apartheid’ whereas- in reality most of these students were born after the demise of apartheid in 1994;

Dutch media also increasingly critical of ANC’s ethnic-cleansing of Afrikaans from public life:

“Cleansing Afrikaans names from the SA map also suppresses the millions of people who speak this beautiful language “ – Dutch columnist Rob Hoogland, March 31 2012

March 31 2012 - Criticism of the ANC-regime is growing rapidly in The Netherlands: which for years had been its staunchest and most active supporter. There has also been unease among British journalists such as David Beresford, who from March 10 2006 already raised fears in The Guardian that “the African National Congress insistence on renaming streets and buildings was driving a new wedge between white Afrikaners and black South Africans.’

“Ethnic-cleansing of Afrikaans/Dutch from SA map also suppresses the millions of people who speak it…”

Influential Dutch political commentator Rob Hoogland suggested in his column “Kringen” (Circles) in Telegraaf daily on March 31 2012 (left) ‘whether the Dutch should perhaps also change their place-names named after for instance, ANC-icon Nelson Mandela, PAC-icon Steve Biko etc: He sounded a warning: noting that with the ‘scrubbing of Afrikaans from the map’, that Afrikaans language and the millions of people who speak it also are increasingly being suppressed by these useless measures: (name-changes). This is a beautiful language which is spoken by many millions of South Africans, including many people of colour, a fact which is often forgotten…” In a personal aside, he noted that he hated Steve Biko Boulevard because he always got tickets for driving 3km above the speed limit. “But I hate that road even if it had been named after (Dutch singer) Corry Konings.’

ANC makes all the classic post-revolutionary errors:

He pointed out that the African National Congress party now has been in total control of South Africa, and again, as other regime’s have done before them, making all the ‘classic post-revolutionary errors’ by ethnically-cleansing hundreds of (Afrikaans/Dutch) names from the South African map.

The ‘Federasie van Afrikaanse-Kultuurorganisasies (FAK)’s request to Dutch premier Mark Rutte also was widely recorded in the mainstream Dutch news media and many regional newspapers yesterday:

Top Dutch agricultural weekly slams ANC-plans on forced land-sales

Last week, criticism also rained down on the ANC from various Dutch media-sources including from the influential agricultural magazine Boerderij, and even from state-broadcaster NOS . Each ran critical stories: highlighting the failing policies of the ANC-regime: slamming its proposed ‘forced land-sale’ law-changes despite the fact that more than two-thirds of all the former white-owned farms are already in State-hands; they ran stories on the ANC’s proposed Pretoria street-name changes for Dutch queen Wilhelmina and other Afrikaans/Dutch names; the Zuma-regime’s active encouragement of the murderous attacks against Afrikaner farmers with its struggle-song Shoot the Boer -- and the regime’s very clear failure to protect its commercial farming-community. These interesting facts were noted amongst others by avid Dutch blogger Bart Bouwman.

De Telegraaf newspaper discovered that the Dutch missionary Riet Vuyk may have been murdered for entirely different motives than the ‘robbery’ claim by the ANC-regime:

The article noted (detail above left): “A new wind started blowing at the Ministry (of social development) over the past year - it’s now apparently the policy that black children may only be fostered by black families. The SA authorities’ refusal to support Mrs Vuyk’s orphanage probably created horrific tension between her and her accused murderer Leonard Gina…’ (Sat March 24 2012, De Telegraaf) . The full-page article about the gruesome murder of the Dutch missionary in Ubombo, KZN by journalist Joël Roerig, who visited the Ubombo region and interviewed the locals about her horrific murder and the circumstances leading up to it, revealed another motive may have led to her death; and that a sudden government change in policy – namely to allow only black-Africans to foster black Aids-orphans -- had stirred up considerable tensions with a local black man over Mrs Vuyk’s fostering five black orphans. De Telegraaf quoted one of Riet’s friends: who blamed her murder directly on the ANC-regime’s policy-change.”This probably led to friction and her murder this month,” Roerig noted below:

ANC policy: ‘Black children must be cared for only black children’ – and Jacob Zuma blamed the Christians for the emergence of orphanages and old-age homes…

“It appears to be policy now that black children must be cared for only by black families. Jacob Zuma held a controversial speech recently in which he blamed the Christians for the emergence of orphans and old-age homes'. Mrs Vuyk, who had five black children in her care in the Jan Vuyk orphanage, told her friend Mtshali that the public prosecutor had refused to charge a neighbour called Mr Gina - who now is the main accused in her murder – after he had assaulted the frail Dutch woman in a row over the care of the orphans: one of which he fostered and received foster-care benefits for . “It’s because I am white,’ Mrs Vuyk told her friend after the authorities refused to prosecute the man. Concluded De Telegraaf: “These strange flipflops of the authories clearly created enormous tensions between Mrs Vuyk and her neighbour Mr Gina. Mrs Vuyk’s English-speaking white friend Mrs Rozanne Hay, who now lives in the UK but often visited the local prison with Mrs Vuyk when she lived in SA, said “Riet was getting enormous opposition from the social workers – and their criteria were changing constantly. Especially during the past year. It now appears to be policy that black children may only be cared for by black families.’ (The entire Telegraaf article is reproduced in the documents section below)

He dedicated his blog to 'that all too sweet ANC-regime'writing: On Wednesday the Dutcn national broadcaster NOS Radio 1 airs a critical programme about the 'agricultural reform' in South Africa. The two interviewed farmers from Lindley in the Free State- one white, one black - both slam the ANC 's proposed policy of forcing white farmers to sell their land, as happened in Zimbabwe. "It must be done differently - on a voluntary basis - both farmers said. Moreover, the NOS agrees with this statement. Two farmers were interviewed: the first one, a white farmer named Diettrich, spoke in English, the black farmer spoke in Afrikaans. The Afrikaans text was not translated by NOS - but the English was: “so farmer Diettrich when you read this: please NEVER speak English to Dutch journalists again to 'make their jobs easier'.Rather speak Afrikaans. However, according to the NOS, it's the ANC which gets the blame,” Bouwman noted.

Dutch public broadcaster insulted over ANC-attitude towards Pretoria street name-changes, equating Verwoerd with Dutch Queen Wilhelmina… The NOS already expressed disquiet with the ANC-regime over another matter: namely the ANC-regime’s considering Pretoria’s street-names of Dutch Queens Wilhelmina (1898-1948) as being ‘ equally undesirable as the streets named after people such as Hendrik Verwoerd.”Bouwman noted: -- (erroneously, as Beatrix street was named after one of the first Boer-pioneers, Mrs Beatrix Meintjies – still a Dutch name however) that one cannot mention Dutch Queen Beatrix’ name as having been any integral part of Pretoria’s apartheid-past. On the contrary, the Dutch Royal family have very good personal friendships with (Desmond) Tutu and (Nelson) Mandela. Dutch princess Mabel even heads The Elders Foundation, founded in 2007 by Mandela. “Dear ANC” he writes: ‘ with this attitude you strike at the very heart of Dutch monarchists. And that’s exactly the group which because of their conservatism, thus could also become very pro-Afrikaner…’

Top Dutch agricultural magazine sides with Transvaal Agricultural Union – slams ANC-refusal to protect white farmers and its proposed law to force farmers to sell their land: He also referred to a very critical article about the growing struggle of the commercial farming community in South Africa to stay afloat under the ever-changing ANC-policies – the latest being the proposal to ‘encourage land reform by forced-sales of farms’. The largest and most authoritative agricultural magazine in the Netherlands, Boerderij - also directly blames the ANC-leadership for its grotesque lack of security for white farmers.

“Boerderij’ ran a full-page article about the European Parliament meeting featuring guest-speaker Henk van de Graaf, the vice president of the Transvaal-Agricultural Union (TLU) and quoted from his presentation when directly blaming the ANC-regime's demolishment of the very effective Commando System (slashed practically overnight under Thabo Mbeki) for the violent attacks, rapes and murders which Afrikaner farm-families have to endure on a daily basis: and which can be seen in the daily harrowing incidents described on the independent criminology-site http://www.farmitracker.com

ANC does very little to protect the farmers: instead their leaders sing inciting song Shoot the Boer

Writes Bouwman: “Boerderij is critical, saying that the ANC does too little to protect the farmers – indeed they point out that the ANC indeed supports the attackers of white farmers with their 'struggle song 'Kill the Boer,' and 'Shoot the Boer.' The magazine published a large photo of a tractor with the Afrikaans text: "Sonder die boer kan jou ma jou nie voer." (Without the farmer, your mom can't feed you'. Bouwman: “That was very appropriate for this magazine which four years ago also pushed a campaign with the motto: 'Wie een boer laat stikken, heeft straks niks te bikken.'(If you let your farmers get beaten there will be nothing for eatin’’.

In fact Bouwman points out that “Boerderij’ – probably the largest official mouthpiece for agriculture in The Netherlands – had also openly started supporting the Transvaal Agricultural Union of South Africa. “I think it's a historic step. This means that the 'official mouth piece… for Dutch agriculture now supports the Afrikaner farmers."

These critical articles are very meaningful: De Telegraaf has more than 2m readers a day; the NOS, the state-broadcaster, won a prize in 2011 for the ‘most trustworthy news’, and the weekly Boerderij is the largest agricultural magazine in The Netherlands.

Dutch protestant woman Riet Vuyk, who ran an Aids-orphanage with private funding from The Netherlands, was murdered in March 2012: the lies around her murder were investigated by Dutch journalist Joël Roerig, :

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Train-commuter, Dutch citizen Jorit de Vries, left, who works at the Cape Town offices of a foreign airline company, was struck in the eye by a large stone thrown by a black commuter from another passing train. A fellow passenger had to help him get an ambulance; (the railway authorities ignored the injured white man); the first hospital refused him medical care; at the second one he was put on a waiting list despite his critical injury, and after a three-day wait to get seen at a third hospital, which diagnosed that he’d also sustained several cracks in his skull, concluded his eye would have to be removed by then. De Vries flew back to The Netherlands instead. The Cape of Good Hope’s world-famous, centuries-old spirit of hospitality has clearly died under the ANC-regime. http://www.boerentrepreneur.com/farmitracker/reports/view/2473

ANC regime wants to wipe every presence of Afrikaans history from the map:

ANC regime wants to wipe every presence of Boer- Afrikaans history from the map:

March 30 2012 at 01:22pm By PATRICK HLAHLA Emotions ran high on Thursday when the street name-change issue came before the Tshwane Metro Council’s meeting.The new names approved by council will be submitted to the Minister of Arts and Culture and the Geographic Names Committee for approval. The Democratic Alliance (DA) accused the Freedom Front Plus (FF+) of not representing Afrikaners, while the latter accused the former’s regional leader (North Gauteng), Tshepiso Msimang, of being a “token black”.Msimang had earlier said that the DA represented more Afrikaners than the FF+, adding that the three FF+ councillors – Dr Conrad Beyers, Piet Uys and Philip van Staden – represented themselves.Beyers responded and said that Msimang was a “token black” and could not take any decisions.He further stated that the FF+ would possibly challenge the name change issue in court.DA caucus leader Brandon Topham said it was important that the new street names reflected everyone’s history. Topham said the DA would have changed the names if they were in power.“We would have changed the names… we have to respect everyone’s history,” said Topham.Azapo councillor Mankoto Lesufi said it had taken too long for the metro council to implement changes. “The time of change has taken too long. Azapo was growing very impatient on change,” he said.Lesufi said the metro council needed to get rid “of the vestiges that represent the previous regime”.Cope councillor Kedibone Mathebe said they supported the ANC-led metro council’s decision to change the names.“But we believe that the (public participation) process was not properly conducted,” she said.Mathebe said they were surprised that a new name had been proposed for Church Street.“There is nothing derogatory about Church Street,” she said.Mathebe said there was “ambiguity” regarding the name Madiba, the new name proposed for Vermeulen Street. “Some people say it is the clan name of former President Nelson Mandela, others say it is a stream, while others say it is the name of a chief,” said Mathebe.She added that Robert Sobukwe (the new name proposed for Esselen Street) deserved to be allocated a prominent street. “Esselen Street is too short,” said Mathebe, adding that Lucas Mangope’s name should not be replaced “as he served his people (in former Bophuthatswana)”.PAC councillor Wandi Montjane said the ANC had shown maturity and vision with the name change.Montjane said Church Street should have been changed to Jeff Masemola. “This would have made Atteridgeville residents happy. This is a man who was brutalised on Robben Island,” he said.Executive mayor Kgosientso Ramokgopa expressed his disappointment at the response of FF+ councillor (Philip) Van Staden, who had earlier stated that they had not reached any consensus on the name changes.Ramokgopa criticised Van Staden, saying he was “disingenious” and should not be trusted.Ramokgopa said it remained the ANC’s policy to engage the various political parties on the name change issue. “But of concern is councillor Van Staden’s attitude. He said a number of things during radio interviews and through other FF+ mediums and he has shown that he cannot be trusted,” he said.He said the ANC had not “rammed” the street names issue through, but decided to consult other political parties represented in council. “The gloves are off… they can run to the court. We will defend that action. There is nothing unconstitutional that we are doing,” he said.

The name changes

* Church (there was a church on Church Square) From Nelson Mandela to the East – Stanza Bopape (ANC activist murdered by security forces) From Nelson Mandela to Church Square – Helen Joseph (anti-apartheid activist headed 1956 Women’s March to Union Buildings)From Church Square to R511 – WF Nkomo (Medical doctor and educator)From R511 to the West – Elias Motsoaledi (ANC activist, one of the eight men sentenced at the Rivonia Trial to life imprisonment)

* Michael Brink (Johannes Michael van Helsdingen Brink was the mayor of Innesdal before it was incorporated into Pretoria) – Nico Smith (anti-apartheid activist, lived with his congregation in Mamelodi)* Zambezi (river) will now be known as Sefako Makgotho (politician, journalist, teacher and president of the SA Native National Congress)* Hendrik Verwoerd (prime minister of SA) – Johan Heyns (moderator of Ned Geref Kerk, criticised apartheid and was assassinated)* Voortrekkers / Beatrix (daughter of Meintjies, after whom Meintjieskop is named) / Mears (James Edward Mears was a businessman who ended up penniless) – Steve Biko (Black Consciousness Movement leader, died in Pretoria Central Prison)* Hans Strijdom (apartheid prime minister) – Solomon Mahlangu (ANC activist, hanged in 1979)* Mitchell (George Mitchell’s daughter Rebecca married John Soutter, who laid out Pretoria West, using many of his relatives’ names) – Charlotte Maxeke (religious leader and political activist)* Schoeman (Commandant-General Stephanus Schoeman, at one time acting president of the Boer Republic of the Transvaal, the ZAR) – Francis Baard (activist who participated in 1956 Women’s March)* Van der Walt (owner of the farm Elandspoort on which Pretoria was established) – Lilian Ngoyi (anti-apartheid activist and president of ANC Women’s League)* Andries (Andries Pretorius, after whom the city was named) – Thabo Sehume (Black Consciousness Movement stalwart and trade unionist)* Jacob Mare (member of the ZAR Volksraad, song My Sarie Marais was written for his daughter) – Jeff Masemola (PAC activist and Atteridgeville teacher sentenced to life on Robben Island)* DF Malan (apartheid prime minister of SA) – Es’kia Mphahlele (SA writer, academic, artist and activist)* Prinsloo (legislator Joachim Prinsloo) – Sisulu (in recognition of the contribution of Sisulu family)* Skinner (William Skinner, landdrost) – Nana Sita (anti-apartheid activist, member of Transvaal Indian Congress)* Queen Wilhelmina (Dutch queen) – Florence Ribeiro (anti-apartheid activist who, with her husband Fabian, was killed by security forces)* Esselen (Ewald Esselen, jurist and politician, attorney-general of the Boer Republic of the Transvaal, the ZAR (1902)) – Robert Sobukwe (PAC president) * Vermeulen (Hendrik Vermeulen was a mason) – Madiba (affectionate name for former president Nelson Mandela)* Schubart (Anton Schubart, a state secretary) – Sophie de Bruyn (anti-apartheid activist and founder of SA Congress of Trade Unions)* Potgieter (PJ Potgieter was first full-time mayor of Pretoria) – Kgosi Mampuru (local chief in 19th century, his kraal was on the banks of the Apies River)* Proes (BEC Proes was the first state attorney) – Johannes Ramokhoase (teacher and first black mayor of Pretoria)* Duncan (Sir Patrick Duncan, the first South African to become governor-general) – Jan Shoba (Apla commander)* General Louis Botha (first prime minister of Union of South Africa) – January Masilela (secretary for defence killed in car accident)* Walker (after Arthur Walker or his son Mackie, surveyors)/Charles (Charles Marais, many streets in Brooklyn named after Marais family) – Justice Mohamed (Ismail, first chief justice appointed by post-apartheid SA )* Lucas Mangope (president of the Bophuthatswana homeland) – Molefe Makinta (ANC activist)* Leah Mangope (wife of Lucas Mangope) – Peter Magano (anti-apartheid activist)* Paul Kruger (first president of ZAR) – name to be retained * Pretorius (Boer leader after whom Pretoria was named) – name to be retained * Nelson Mandela Drive – Nelson Mandela

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Rapes of white SA men in police-jails is a war-crime pattern

What is Genocide?

IMPORTANT NOTICE

October 20 2017

Please note that my site with the PAST SEVEN YEARS' information on atrocities against white South Africas, was hacked away. It used to be on https://www.censorbugbear.org. I apologize that this information is no longer available online. Anyone needing information about specific cases please email me at a.j.stuijt@knid.nl

For a name-list of murdered white farmers, - smallholders and their family and workers in South Africa, up to April 2011, view:

and for reports of human-rights violations against South African minorities, including whites, after 2011 see: http://censorbugbear-reports.blogspot.nl

The term "genocide" was coined by legal scholar Raphael Lemkin in 1943, writing:

'Generally speaking, genocide does not necessarily mean the immediate destruction of a nation, except when accomplished by mass killings of all members of a nation. It is intended rather to signify a coordinated plan of different actionsaiming at the destruction of essential foundations of the life of national groups, with the aim of annihilating the groups themselves.

The objectives of such a plan would be the disintegration of the political and social institutions, of culture, language, national feelings, religion, and the economic existence of national groups, and the destruction of personal security, liberty, health, dignity and lives of the members of such groups... '